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10 to TRY — Good pairings

Our volunteers regularly pair books that go well together during a single read aloud sitting. Last summer, Christy Schwartz of the West Virginia Campaign for Grade Level Reading told volunteers at the Read Aloud conference that reading multiple texts on a subject helps students to improve their reading skill. Just for the fun of it, here are some of our volunteers’ listener-tested combinations:


The Bad Seed by John Jory and Rude Cakes by Rowboat Watkins are two charming, upbeat narratives all about teaching children about being kind and considerate to others. They pair well together with their complementary art styles and similar, silly takes on how one can be “A baaaaaaaaaad seed.” In each, the main character decides to change his ways from bad or rude and try (though they might not always succeed) to be nicer to those around them. Pre-K – 1 — Amanda Schwartz, Communications and Development Director


The Book with No Pictures by B.J. Novak is agreat book to pair with any book that is too short to fill your allotted time. The children ask over and over for me to re-read this book. I have read it to kindergarten and second grade and it is without question the favorite of every child. I have great fun reading it, too. — Aletta Moffett, Marion County Chapter President


Book of Animal Poetry edited by J. Patrick Lewis, U.S. Children’s Poet Laureate. The poetry is easy to understand for elementary students, the National Geographic photos are beautiful, and students learn about familiar and unfamiliar animals. The highlight is that a couple poems are rap poems (e.g., “Polar Bear Rap”) with the students participating by stomping their feet to the beat. There are always requests to do them second and third times!

A little dose of poetry gives the students something different and pairs well with other animal books. — Tom Tinder, Bridgeview Elementary, Kanawha County


Based on the undocumented notion that the boys prefer “fact” books and the girls prefer “fiction” books, I open with Bats by Elizabeth Carney, a National Geographic Kids Book, full of bat facts. I follow with Stellaluna by Janell Cannon, a beautifully illustrated story of a baby bat that gets separated from its mother and is raised by a bird family before reuniting with the bat mother. It’s a great story that comingles bat facts with bird facts. The whole class really enjoys both aspects of the reading and it makes for a good session. — Casey Willson, Gerrardstown Elementary School, Berkeley County


The Rabbit Listened by Cory Doerrfeld, a favorite of Executive Director Mary Kay Bond. One day Taylor concentrated hard and built something amazing with his blocks. Then disaster struck. The way different characters react to little Taylor’s setback will be recognizable to everyone. I read this along with Odd Velvet by Mary Whitcomb, the story of Velvet, who is thought to be so strange in her kindergarten class because her teacher gifts and birthday party games don’t come from a store. It’s a message kids really need to hear. K-3 — Bob Pepper, Sissonville Elementary, Kanawha County


Camille and the Sunflowers by Laurence Anholt tells the story of painter Vincent Van Gogh and the postman’s family in Arles, whom Van Gogh painted, along with his famous sunflowers and Starry Night. Then we read the short rhyming book No One Saw by Bob Raczka, featuring a full-page example of a different artist on each page. When we get to, “No one saw stars like Vincent Van Gogh,” students are thrilled by their recognition, and usually curious about other artists in the book. 3-5– Dawn Miller, Piedmont Elementary, Kanawha County

Have a title to recommend to your fellow Read Aloud volunteers? Tell us about it: newsletter@readaloudwv.org.


If you purchase a book through one of the affiliate links on this page, Read Aloud will receive a small percentage of the proceeds. This in no way impacts our recommendations.

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Thank you for another great Read-A-Palooza!

It’s been a little over a week since Read-A-Palooza 2019: Join Team Read, and we just wanted to take another opportunity to publicly thank those who made it all possible! This year’s event was our most successful yet and we are extremely grateful for the opportunity to bring community members together in support of Read Aloud West Virginia.

Read-A-Palooza is the only fundraising event we host each year and is vital to Read Aloud’s financial sustainability. With the support of our sponsors, donors, and supporters, we were able to meet our Read-A-Palooza fundraising goal this year and ensure that Read Aloud can continue to keep books in the hands and on the minds of West Virginia children!

This year’s event focused on creating excitement for books and reading the same way our society does for sports. In his remarks, our special guest WVU Football Coach Neal Brown beautifully connected the importance of a strong reading foundation to athletic success. With at least three media outlets in attendance and multiple stories written about the event, we’re positive that excitement was generated. We’ve made new friendships, strengthened old ones, inspired new volunteers, and heard multiple times since the event that this was our best Read-A-Palooza to date.

A special thank you to Coach Neal Brown, Coleman Barnes, and West Virginia University; to Tony Caridi, children’s book author and MetroNews sports reporter; to The University of Charleston, UC President Marty Roth, Robert Elmore of the UC Vice President’s office, and Ray Singleton of the UC Department of Education; to David Hager Photography; and to all of sponsors and silent auction donors listed below!

Signature Sponsors

Gold Sponsors

Silver Sponsors

William Maxwell Davis

The Becker Family

Bronze Sponsors

Chris & Amy Panzarella

Friends of Read-A-Palooza

Juli Hatcher Mock – JH Records

Silent Auction Donors

Andrew Adkins

Base Camp Printing

Berry Hills Country Club

Bob & Tina Pepper

Bricks & Barrels

Budget Tapes & Records

Canaan Valley Resort

Capon Springs & Farms

Carnegie Hall

Cathedral Café/Southside Junction Tap House

Chef Paul Smith

Dick’s Sporting Goods

Embassy Suites

Erica Baumgrass

Fayette County Chamber of Commerce/Official Bridge Day

Read Aloud WV of Fayette County

Gallery B Studio

Gat Creek

Greenbrier Valley Theatre

Hawks Nest State Park

Jacke Venus

Jeff Fetty Designs

Kinship Goods

LaFayette Flats Lodging

Lucia Bishop

Mardi Gras Casino

Marshall University

Melissa Doty

Mountain Art Glass

Mountain Heritage Books

Noah’s Restaurant & Lounge

Pettit Jewelry

Pies & Pints-Fayetteville

River Expeditions Rafting & Kayaking

Ruth Ranson

Sara Busse

Secret Sandwich Society

Stephen & Jennie Fitzkee

The Blennerhassett Hotel

The Stache Ice Cream Shoppe

The Station Restaurant

Tony Caridi

Viki Heagy Books

West Virginia Book Company

Wisteria Gifts

Wisteria Gifts

WV Power

Yoga Power

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An open letter to moms who read

Dear Reader,

This Mother’s Day, we’d like to take a moment to thank you for reading to your child. By teaching them to value reading, you’re planting and nurturing a reading seed that will flourish over the years, giving your child a lifelong love of books. This is truly something to be proud of, and something for which the staff at Read Aloud would like to express our gratitude. By creating a positive relationship with reading, you’re raising a child who can and will pass that passion for books on to others, who will in turn pass it on. Your one reading seed could spread to impact thousands of people! 

So this Mother’s Day, congratulate yourself for every story you’ve read, every library trip you’ve made, every book you’ve bought – you’re changing the world, one page at a time.

Thank you for all that you do for literacy in WV, and happy Mother’s Day!

Sincerely,

Read Aloud West Virginia


Click here to visit our Mother’s Day Honor Wall to see all the moms being recognized by their children for teaching them to love reading!

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Make summer a time for growth

For decades, researchers, teachers and parents have observed that children who read for pleasure during summer break tend to have better scores and understanding in school. Children must have the “equipment” and opportunity to read for fun over the summer. Here are some ways to make reading for fun likely to happen this summer:

  • Keep books around. Check them out of the public library. Keep a few in the car.
  • Make time to read every day. Even a few minutes count. No quizzes or tests. Just fun. If the book isn’t enjoyable, give it back and try another.
  • Give books as gifts.
  • Ask readers what they like. Get recommendations from other readers until you find something enjoyable to you and the children in your life.
  • List five books you would like to read this summer. Share your goal.
  • Organize a book swap, suggests Donalyn Miller, author of Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer’s Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits. In her school, teachers and students donate books and receive tickets. Then they browse and choose a “new” book in exchange for each ticket.
  • Pack books for trips or errands. Keep a book to read while standing in line.
  • Host a library card sign-up event, Miller suggests. Invite librarians to share details of summer reading programs.
  • Read aloud to children, even after they are able to read on their own. Children take their cue for what is important from the adults around them.

Children who read during the summer are more likely to maintain or even gain reading skills, report Richard L. Allington and Anne McGill-Franzen in their book Summer Reading: Closing the Rich/Poor Reading Achievement Gap.

Citing the same research, Stephen D. Krashen points out in The Power of Reading that reading just one book over the summer was associated with a small improvement in reading comprehension. Reading five books over the summer can stop summer learning loss.

Among low-income children, summer reading loss accounts for about 80 percent of the reading achievement gap compared to wealthier classmates.

“What you may find surprising is just how consistently making books available to children from low-income families and to struggling readers enhances reading achievement during the summer months,” Allington writes.

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Good medicine: Future doctors read to children at WVU hospital

By Kaitlyn Guynn

First-year medical student Ryan Cook reads Duck & Goose Find a Pumpkin by Tad Hills to a child in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown

In the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at WVU’s Ruby Memorial Hospital, an infant was connected to various monitors, including one that registered the beep, beep, beep of the baby’s rapid heart rate.

A medical student read to the baby.

“The child’s heart rate slowed down to a relaxed state,” said Katie Ridenour, School Intervention Specialist at Ruby Memorial Hospital.

The student is participating in a new effort of the medical school and Read Aloud West Virginia.

Ridenour, a former teacher in Marion County, works to help children maintain as many normal childhood routines and activities as possible while they are in the hospital.

Having seen the success of Read Aloud in Marion County, Ridenour reached out to Read Aloud, said Read Aloud Executive Director Mary Kay Bond.

They worked together to organize 13 medical students to read regularly to pediatric patients, sometimes two to four children at a time.

The educational benefits of reading aloud to children are well established. Volunteers have witnessed other benefits among these children. In addition to the baby who was soothed, children and their parents are pleased when readers enter the hospital room.

“For a volunteer to come and knock, and just visit to read to you, their faces light up knowing that it’s not for a medical procedure,” Ridenour said.

“It’s been great, with positive feedback from the families,” she said. “It’s a nice program, and it’s been really satisfying.”

In addition to serving children in the hospital, this effort gives medical students the opportunity to discover the value of reading to children from birth so they can model and encourage read aloud habits in their own practices in the near future.

“Absolutely,” said Levi Snedegar, a first-year medical student who plans to take the experience into his practice, whether that turns out to be pediatrics or primary care.

“I was actually in a program where we would shadow a child visit,” he said. “They would receive a book based on their age or cognitive development.”

“We want to connect to health care providers,” Bond said. “Health care providers see children at much earlier stages of development, and we seek to reach children at the earliest stage possible. It is a critically important time and sets the tone for a child’s education.”

When children are read to from birth, “They come already primed and ready before they enter the schoolhouse door,” she said.

The American Academy of Pediatrics began in 2014 to recommend reading to children every day from birth. Reading to babies not only strengthens their bonding with caregivers, but also increases their language skills, including vocabulary. Reading aloud to children boosts brain activity and social and emotional development.

At the WVU School of Medicine, students feel the benefit of reading to children, as well as their young patients.

“A lot of them are volunteering because they have pediatrics in mind,” Ridenour said. “It gives them good exposure for treating [patients] as a whole, and not just about treating them medically. But emotionally, cognitively, and physically as well.”

“This program is an integral part of their inpatient care, and a rewarding part as well, for first- and second-year medical students,” Snedegar said. “If this program was implemented across the county, there would be less of a burnout rate.

“It is an absolutely awesome experience. Too often you get tied down with studying and not allowed to actually visit with the children.”

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Read Aloud West Virginia wants to partner with health care providers around the state to help them help families, and to motivate children to want to read. To explore the possibilities, contact us at stateoffice@readaloudwv.org.

Kaitlyn Guynn is a student at the University of Charleston.

Berkeley County volunteer lights up kindergarten, second-grade classrooms

Betty Cuthbert looked up and realized she had been reading to Berkeley County school children for 25 years, with no plans to slow down.

By Bob Fleenor

Betty Cuthbert was surprised to realize she’s been a volunteer reader at Berkeley Heights Elementary School in Martinsburg for the past quarter century.

“I didn’t know it had been 25 years. If you enjoy it, you don’t count (the years),” she said. “I feel sorry for people who spend their time doing nothing.”

Cuthbert is one of approximately 175 Read Aloud West Virginia volunteers who visit Berkeley County classrooms each week.

Cuthbert, a native of Queens, N.Y., is one of Read Aloud’s longest-tenured readers. She and Bob, her husband of 55 years, moved to Berkeley County about 30 years ago when Bob took a job at Dulles International Airport.

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Fayette County educators, parents, Read Aloud volunteers and Brookfield Renewable employees gather to mark the company’s recent donation. At center, Read Aloud West Virginia Executive Director Mary Kay Bond, Kevin Moriarty of Brookfield Renewable; and Andrew Davis, Brookfield Renewable director of stakeholder relations, North America, hold the ceremonial check.

Brookfield Renewable gives $15,000 for local youth programs


Montgomery — Brookfield Renewable has donated $15,000 to Read Aloud West Virginia to support literacy for the children of West Virginia.

“As a member of the West Virginia community, and particularly the Fayette County and Montgomery areas, we are proud to be able to make this donation,” said Andrew Davis, Brookfield Renewable Director of Stakeholder Relations, North America.

“Read Aloud West Virginia has done tremendous work in promoting the importance of reading among the youth of West Virginia by keeping books in children’s hands and by teaching them how reading is not only a valuable life skill, but how fun and enjoyable it is,” Davis said.

Show, don’t tell: Poetry, relevance sell middle schoolers on reading

 

By Dawn Miller

“What would you say to the kids in the room to encourage them to read?” Newbery Award winner Kwame Alexander was asked at the West Virginia Book Festival in Charleston.

“I wouldn’t say anything,” Alexander answered.

“Who wants to be told? If you really want to connect and make somebody feel engaged, show them. That’s the real way to reach anybody. Make them feel something.”

From one of the readers in the crowd, Alexander borrowed a copy of his novel Rebound, a story about a 12-year-old boy who is dealing with loss, who can’t play basketball, but wishes he could. “This is what I would do,” he said, and recited an excerpt from the novel, which like all his books, is written in almost singable poetry.

It’s so singable, Alexander’s musician best friend Randy Preston, a retired teacher, brought hs guitar and sang a song from it. The two perform together now. They have visited almost 900 schools in the last three years.

“I don’t think you have to tell kids why they need to read,” Alexander said. “I think you’ve got to show them.”

Read Aloud of Jackson County receives community grant

By Sara Busse

Two programs of the Jackson County Read Aloud chapter received a financial boost thanks to a $2,500 grant from the Jackson County Community Foundation. Snuggle and Read and Snak Pak will each benefit from the grant.

Snuggle and Read encourages families to read together, providing books and blankets so participants can experience the pleasure that a warm blanket and a great read can bring when shared with a child. Several of these well-received events have been held at elementary schools and county libraries in Jackson County and throughout the state. The grant money will be used to purchase books for Snuggle and Read. Blankets are provided by Constellium Corporation.

The Snak Pak program, according to Jackson County Read Aloud co-chair Lisa Bailey, is run by Parchment Valley Baptist Church, providing weekly snack packs to approximately 190 children who may need a little extra food during the weekends. Read Aloud is now adding the excitement of books.

“Mid-year last year, Read Aloud Jackson County started providing books with the snack packs on a once-a-month basis to the children so that they would also have their very own books to read,” Bailey said. “While we may have shelves of books at our own home, some homes have very few books or no books at all. We have been receiving positive feedback from the schools about how excited the kids are to pick out their monthly book. They can hardly wait!”

Read Aloud West Virginia helped complete the grant application and is purchasing the books for the programs.

Lea Ann Tuohy, of the book and movie The Blind Side fame, spoke on “Making a Difference in the Life of a Child” at the Jackson County Community Foundation dinner in October when the awards were granted, according to Jackson co-chair Janet McCauley.

“The inspiring story of Michael Orr, a homeless child who was taken in and nurtured by the Tuohys and who became an NFL standout, emphasized the importance of stepping out of your comfort zone to help others,” McCauley explained. Tuohy said she appreciated the connection with the work done by Read Aloud Jackson County.

McCauley said, “By providing both the Snuggle and Read project and the Snak Pak program with books, Jackson County Read Aloud is hoping to make a difference in the lives of many children. We were very pleased to be a recipient and that the monies have helped to meet our desire to get books in the hands of children.”

To get involved in the Jackson County Read Aloud chapter, contact McCauley at jkmccauley@suddenlink.net or Bailey at lisa.bailey@suddenlink.net.

Sara Busse is a long-time Charleston resident and community volunteer.